Transgenerational and intergenerational effects of early childhood famine exposure in the cohort of offspring of Leningrad Siege survivors

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作者
Kristina Tolkunova
Dmitrii Usoltsev
Ekaterina Moguchaia
Maria Boyarinova
Ekaterina Kolesova
Anastasia Erina
Trudy Voortman
Elena Vasilyeva
Anna Kostareva
Evgeny Shlyakhto
Alexandra Konradi
Oxana Rotar
Mykyta Artomov
机构
[1] Almazov National Medical Research Centre,Department of Epidemiology, Erasmus MC
[2] ITMO University,Institute for Genomic Medicine
[3] University Medical Center,Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine
[4] Nationwide Children’s Hospital,undefined
[5] Ohio State University,undefined
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Famine exposure during early life development can affect disease risk in late-life period, yet, transmission of phenotypic features from famine-exposed individuals to the next generations has not been well characterized. The purpose of our case–control study was to investigate the association of parental starvation in the perinatal period and the period of early childhood with the phenotypic features observed in two generations of descendants of Leningrad siege survivors. We examined 54 children and 30 grandchildren of 58 besieged Leningrad residents who suffered from starvation in early childhood and prenatal age during the Second World War. Controls from the population-based national epidemiological ESSE-RF study (n = 175) were matched on sex, age and body mass index (BMI). Phenotypes of controls and descendants (both generations, children and grandchildren separately) were compared, taking into account multiple testing. Comparison of two generations descendants with corresponding control groups revealed significantly higher creatinine and lower glomerular filtration rate (GFR), both in meta-analysis and in independent analyses. The mean values of GFR for all groups were within the normal range (GFR less than 60 mL/min/1.73 m2 was recorded in 2 controls and no one in DLSS). Additionally, independent of the creatinine level, differences in the eating pattern were detected: insufficient fish and excessive red meat consumption were significantly more frequent in the children of the Leningrad siege survivors compared with controls. Blood pressure, blood lipids and glucose did not differ between the groups. Parental famine exposure in early childhood may contribute to a decrease in kidney filtration capacity and altered eating pattern in the offspring of famine-exposed individuals.
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